LOS ANGELES — Crystal Hernández steadies her violin and scans the crowd from the sixth floor of SoFi Stadium as 70,000 fans stream into a Los Angeles Rams home game. Below her, blue-and-gold jerseys mix with charro suits and sombreros, and the low rumble of pregame noise swells into the opening notes of the late Ozzy Osbourne's ''Crazy Train'' reimagined through trumpets, guitarrón and vihuela.
On Hernández's right, rock guitarist Nita Strauss cuts through with an electric solo as the several-piece mariachi ensemble locked into rhythm. On the concourse, fans stop mid-step, phones raised, caught by the unlikely fusion of rock, mariachi and football.
At games, it's not unusual to hear Kendrick Lamar,Bad Bunny and Beyoncé's music blaring through the speakers. But the Mariachi Rams are reshaping the sound of NFL game day, blending traditional Mexican music with Los Angeles' hip-hop and rock influences in a way no other team in the league does.
''Mariachi music has so much flexibility and I think that's special because we get to show how versatile mariachi music is to the NFL audience,'' says Hernández, who is the only woman in the NFL's first official mariachi band. She's the daughter of Mariachi legend José Hernández, who built the ensemble when he partnered with the Rams in 2019.
In one moment, they play classic mariachi standards. In the next, they are turning Tupac Shakur's ''California Love'' into a brass-heavy anthem as a lowrider car bounces nearby while fans roar from the stands.
''The things that come out of our communities, all of our communities, we all represent each other,'' says rapper Xzibit, who performed with the USC Marching Band at halftime during the Rams game against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers. He says seeing the Mariachi Rams on the NFL stage speaks to how the culture moves through the city without boundaries.
''To be brought into something where culture is embraced on that level,'' Xzibit says. ''That's when you feel like you're part of something that matters.''
How the Mariachi Rams achieved an NFL first